Saturday, May 24, 2025

'We are putting America first': 5 takeaways from Trump's West Point commencement speechNew Foto - 'We are putting America first': 5 takeaways from Trump's West Point commencement speech

Sporting a "Make America Great Again" hat, PresidentDonald Trumpemphasized the need for the country to put its priorities above all else during his commencement addresses at West Point on Saturday. "Gone are the days where defending every nation but our own was the primary thought," he aid. "We are putting America first. We have to rebuild and defend our nation." This was Trump's second address to cadets at the upstate New York academy, where the nation's next generation of army leaders are educated. The last time he spoke there was at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in May 2020, which saw a more subdued ceremony of cadets sitting several feet apart. The president told the military graduates during a roughly hourlong speech that they are joining elite and storied ranks. "You came for excellence. You came for duty. You came to serve your country and you came to show yourselves, your family and the world that you are among the smartest, toughest (and) most lethal warriors ever to walk on this planet," he said. Attending graduation ceremonies at one of the nation's five military academiesis a common ritual for every commander-in-chief, and gives them a chance to flex their larger defense strategy. The 2025 West Point graduation speech comes at a pivotal moment for Trump, as he seeks to install his populist-fueled agenda in the military's apparatuses and policies while seeking to reshape previous alliances and negotiate an end to the Ukraine-Russia war. Here are the key takeaways from Saturday's graduation. Trump didn't hold back in justifying his "America First" worldview in terms of how the U.S. military should operate, whether at home or abroad. "The job of the U.S. armed forces is not to host drag shows, to transform foreign cultures (and) spread democracy to everybody around the world at the point of a gun," he said. "The military's job is to dominate any foe and annihilate any threat to America, anywhere, anytime and any place." At various moments during the keynote address, Trump called out what he described as "divisive and demeaning political trainings" at the academy, which has been ordered to ditch talk of systemic inequity in its syllabi and forced student affinity clubs for women and racial minorities to disband. He has signed a number of executive orders in January, for instance, aimed at shaping the country's armed forces such as calling for the creation of an anti-missile defense shield to defend the U.S. against aerial attacks. He also has ordered theshuttering of diversity offices and programsin the Defense Department as well asbanning transgender Americansfrom serving, infuriating liberal critics. The president did briefly mention his plan of investing $25 billion toward building amassive anti-missile defense shieldthat seeks to cover the country with three layers of aerial protection,according to military officials. "We're building the Golden Dome missile defense shield to protect our homeland and to protect West Point from attack, and it will be completed before I leave office," Trump said. One bone Trump consistently picks when talking about America's military might is the U.S. relationship with foreign allies, and how little credit he feels the country gets for helping its friends. During the speech, for example, the president grumbled about how European nations have major celebrations about winning World War II when the U.S. does not. He told West Point graduates about a recent conversation he had with Emmanuel Macron, the president of France. "He said, 'Sir, we're celebrating our victory over WWII.' I said, whoa, whoa, what have we here," Trump said. "We helped them a lot." Trump told the cadets he wants America to have its own V-Day celebration. The president's love of military celebrations is well known, as the army isgearing up for a paradethrough the streets of Washington DC, something he tried unsuccessfully to hold during his first term that is now billed as commemorating the force's 250th birthday. The June 14 date also happens to be the president's 79th birthday. As Trump outlined his defense agenda and showered cadets with praise, thepresident was met with a pair of demonstrationsincluding a small flotilla of boats in the Hudson River in sight of the graduation ceremonies. Protesters began toassemble outside the military academy's eventhours before the president arrived, with many holding signs reading "Go Army, Defend Democracy" as guests and dignitaries arrived. Joining Forces, a grassroots organization that organized the protests, said it objected to Trump's appearance "at the very site where our democracy was forged — where George Washington and his troops resisted tyranny and broke free from a king — represents a profound insult to American patriots." "We are pretty concerned about the destruction of our democracy, particularly in the Hudson Highlands where our nation was formed," Alex Dubroff, a protest organizer, said. The roughly 1,000 graduating cadets heard Trump boast about a coming "golden age" for the country now that he pinned largely upon parting ways with his predecessors. "For at least two decades, political leaders from both parties have dragged our military into missions never meant to be," Trump said. "People would say, why are we doing this? Why are we wasting our time, money and souls? In some case, they sent our warriors on nation building crusades to nations that wanted nothing to do with us, led by leaders that didn't have a clue in distant lands." Trump didn't mention any former president by name, but the pointed remarks underscore his more isolationist perspective compared to Republican and Democratic predecessors. "My preference always will be to make peace and seek partnership, even with countries with which our differences may be profound," he said. One thing that didn't come up much was a progress report on ending the Ukraine-Russia war, which is one of Trump's top foreign affairs goals. The president had a a two-hour call with Russian PresidentVladimir Putinearlier this week, saying peace talks would begin "immediately." It is unclear if those talks will included Ukraine PresidentVolodymyr Zelenskyy, who had a tense exchange with Trump inside the Oval Office in February. Trump mentioned Putin only a handful of times and in passing, such as at the end of his speech when he told cadets he was, "going back now to deal with Russia." "You won two world wars and plenty of other things, but you want to think of it, we don't want to have a third world war," he said. Contributing:Mike Randall This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Trump eschews diversity, touts 'Golden Dome' at West Point speech

'We are putting America first': 5 takeaways from Trump's West Point commencement speech

'We are putting America first': 5 takeaways from Trump's West Point commencement speech Sporting a "Make America Great Agai...
Trump Threatens Apple With 25% Tariff on iPhonesNew Foto - Trump Threatens Apple With 25% Tariff on iPhones

iPhone 16 smartphones at an Apple store in the Brooklyn borough of New York, U.S, on Friday, May 23, 2025. Credit - Yuki Iwamura—Getty Images President Donald Trump has warned Apple CEO Tim Cook that not manufacturing iPhones in the United States will result in a minimum tariff of 25% on Apple goods. In a post shared via TruthSocial on Friday,the President said: "I have long ago informed Tim Cook of Apple that I expect their iPhone's that will be sold in the United States of America will be manufactured and built in the United States, not India, or anyplace else. If that is not the case, a Tariff of at least 25% must be paid by Apple to the U.S." Later on Friday,when speaking to reporters at the White House, Trump said his tariffs could apply to more than just Apple. "It would be also Samsung and anybody that makes that product, otherwise it wouldn't be fair," he said. Trump estimated that it would start by "the end of June.""Again, when they build their plants here [in the U.S.], there's no tariff," Trump emphasized. "I had an understanding with Tim that he wouldn't be doing this. He said he's going to India to build plants, I said: 'That's OK to go to India, but you're not going to sell it to here without tariffs.' That's the way it is." In aninterview on Fox News, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said: "I think that one of our greatest vulnerabilities is this external production, especially in semiconductors. And a large part of Apple's components are in semiconductors. So we would like to have Apple help us make the semiconductor supply chain more secure." Trump previously raised the issue of Apple manufacturing abroad, particularly in India, during his three-country tour of the Middle East. At a business roundtable in Qatar on Thursday, May 15, Trump said:"I had a little problem with Tim Cook yesterday, I said to him: 'Tim, you're my friend. You're coming here with $500 billion, but now you're building all over India. I don't want you building in India.'" In February,Apple announced that it would be spending more than $500 billion in the U.Sover the next four years. This was slated to include investment in a new factory in Texas, a manufacturing academy, as well as spending in AI and silicon engineering. Whilst Trump is hopeful that Apple could shift more production to the U.S. in order to avoid tariffs, such a change in manufacturing could take time.Analysts estimate that up to 90%of iPhones are assembled in China, and the devices are made up of1,000 from countries across the globe. Apple also announced in early May thatthey would be moving significant production to India, as tariffs between China and the U.S. were in a high stalemate.The trade war with China is currently largely on hold, after both parties announced a 90-day pause on most tariffs. Cook said that most phones will be made in India in the coming months, whilst other products such as iPads and Apple watches will mostly be manufactured in Vietnam. Shortly before Trump's tariff threat on Friday,one of Apple's key production contractors, Foxconn, announced that it would be going ahead with its $1.5 billion component plant near Chennai, India. Whilst a manufacturing transition from China to India has been in the process for Apple for years, the move could be even more significant as the tech giant estimated that around$900 million in extra costscould be added in the current quarter as a result of Trump's tariffs, despite Trump's move tospare key electronics from the new tariffs. The likely rise in the retail price of the product has long been a sticking point when it comes to discussing the possibility of having iPhones produced in the U.S. In response to Trump's tariffs threat, Dan Ives, an analyst at Wedbush Securities,estimated via social mediathat if iPhone production were to move Stateside, the cost of the product could rise to $3,500. Therefore, consumers risk being significantly impacted. The news comes at a time when U.S. consumers are already bracing themselves to feel the impact of Trump's existing tariffs. On May 15, Walmart's chief financial officer John David Rainey warned that the retailer may have to soon start raising prices as the U.S. tariffs are "still too high." "We're wired for everyday low prices, but the magnitude of these increases is more than any retailer can absorb,"Rainey said in an interview with CNBC."It's more than any supplier can absorb. And so I'm concerned that [consumers are] going to start seeing higher prices. You'll begin to see that, likely towards the tail end of this month, and then certainly much more in June."Trump issued a defiant response, telling the retailer to "eat the tariffs." "Walmart should stop trying to blame tariffs as the reason for raising prices throughout the chain. Walmart made BILLIONS OF DOLLARS last year, far more than expected. Between Walmart and China they should, as is said, 'EAT THE TARIFFS,' and not charge valued customers ANYTHING. I'll be watching, and so will your customers," he said viaTruth Social. Contact usatletters@time.com.

Trump Threatens Apple With 25% Tariff on iPhones

Trump Threatens Apple With 25% Tariff on iPhones iPhone 16 smartphones at an Apple store in the Brooklyn borough of New York, U.S, on Friday...
Operation Benjamin works to replace erroneous grave markers for Jewish American service members who died in battleNew Foto - Operation Benjamin works to replace erroneous grave markers for Jewish American service members who died in battle

Ben Zion Bernstein served in one of the most elite fighting units in the US military during World War II – the First Special Service Force – a select group picked and put through rigorous training for among the most perilous missions. His first combat mission turned out to be his last. Bernstein, a technician fourth grade, was killed in the famous battle of Monte La Difensa on December 3, 1943, while storming a steep Italian mountain trying to overtake a Nazi stronghold. Bernstein's siblings and their descendants knew he was a war hero, but none of the details of his sacrifice. They also didn't know that despite being a proud Jew, he'd been buried under a Latin cross for more than 80 years at the Sicily-Rome American Cemetery in Nettuno, Italy, until a historian named Shalom Lamm contacted them. Lamm is with a non-profit organization called Operation Benjamin, which works with the American Battle Monuments Commission to help find Jewish soldiers who were buried in American military cemeteries around the world under Latin crosses and correct those inadvertent errors by replacing their headstones with a Star of David. Several of Bernstein's nieces, nephews, grandnieces and grandnephews traveled to Italy this month to participate in a ceremony to honor him and replace the cross with a Star of David to represent his Jewish faith. "It was a big part of his life. He went to a Jewish school. He was part of the Jewish organizations. He went to Palestine," said nephew Ben Sheridan, who is named for his uncle. "The best part is, you know, what Shalom Lamm and his organization has done to teach us so much about his legacy," he added. The afternoon before the ceremony, the Bernstein family climbed what they called the "easy part" of the mountain where their uncle died and saw the bunker where the Nazis threw a grenade that killed him. And a surprise guest came to meet them. Lamm invited Brad Hicks, the grandson of Major General Robert T. Frederick, a storied World War II military leader who organized, trained and led the First Special Service Force, which later became US Army Special Forces. "When Shalom asked me if I would do this, I didn't hesitate for a moment because I knew that my grandfather would not hesitate for a moment to do this for one of his men who fell on the battlefield," said Hicks, who traveled from Washington state to Italy for the ceremony. "I've had the privilege of meeting many members of our special forces. They know about the Battle of Mount La Difensa. They still study it as part of their training, and they know about the greatness of the men who undertook that mission. Today's special forces embody the legacy of Ben Bernstein," said Hicks. Lamm, whose organization has replaced more than 30 military headstones, said that many times the US military erroneously buried a Jewish service member beneath a cross because the service member intentionally left their religion off their dog tag. "These were true errors," Lamm explained. "America really tried to get it right, but when you had someone who put a 'P' or a 'C' for Protestant and Catholic on their dog tag and they did that to protect themselves in case of capture." "If you were captured by the Germans, in particular, that was really terrifying," Lamm added. "I think we need to look back and think America did a great job getting this right, but they naturally missed some, and our job is to come back after all these decades and find those guys and bring this home and do the right thing," Lamm said. Once Lamm has identified a service member who has been buried under the wrong religious symbol, he sets out doing the research to find proof of the error and the service member's closest living relatives since the only way to change a headstone in a military cemetery is with the approval of the service member's family. "The amount of proof we're required to deliver to the American Battle Monuments Commission is really huge. It's really tough and it should be tough. We're changing something for eternity," said Lamm. Lamm's research often gives families new information about their loved ones, like in the case of Bernstein. "It has happened again and again and again that I introduce people to someone who's just a shadowy figure in their memory, you know. When someone is a kid and he says, 'Hey Mom, there's a black and white photo above the hearth of a guy in a uniform, was that your brother?' and Mom starts to cry and little Johnny says 'I don't want Mom to cry,' and he never asks her again," Lamm explained. "Then I come along, and I say, wow, because of the American Battle Monuments Commission, we know everything about this guy. We went through his high school yearbook. We knew who his girlfriend was. We know what sports he played. We know what career choices [he made]. We know everything about him. And we're introducing families to the shadowy figure and bringing them to life. They were real flesh and blood human beings, and we know that story and it's great to share," he said. Second Lieutenant Paul Singer was a navigator alongside Second Lieutenant Sheldon Finder, a bombardier on the B-24 Liberator "Southern Comfort." On August 16, 1943, during a bombing raid on a German airfield near Foggia, Italy, the aircraft was attacked and caught fire. The crew bailed out, but neither Singer nor Finder's parachutes worked. They were the only two in the unit to die in that attack, and the only two Jewish soldiers on that plane. By happenstance, they are buried right next to each other at the Sicily-Rome American Cemetery. Finder's tombstone was a Star of David to reflect his faith, but, for decades, Singer's grave was inadvertently marked with a Latin cross. That mistake was rectified on the same day as that of Bernstein. Finding Singer's family was a bit more challenging, since he was an only child who was orphaned at age 16. Lamm did find second cousins, who traveled to Italy to honor Singer's service and sacrifice. Cousin Jodi Reff, one of Singer's cousins, spoke at the ceremony. "We, his living relatives, have met Paul through Operation Benjamin, where we are able to stand here 81 years after his tragic death and feel the connection as his descendants." She calls herself a "committed Jew" but more importantly, she said, she now knows that her cousin was too. "Paul lived as a Jew, fought for America and the free world as a Jew, and died as a Jew," she said, noting that now, more than 80 years later, he is finally buried as a Jew as well. Through the process of learning about Singer, Reff met other cousins whom she never knew, like Claudia Lewis. "It puts all the pieces together," said Lewis, standing arm in arm with Reff next to their cousin's grave. They also got to know the family of Finder, whose niece and nephew also made the trip. Even though Finder had long been buried properly, beneath a Jewish Star, no one from his family had visited, or even knew where he was buried. Jonathan Finder, Sheldon Finder's nephew, knew that his own father suffered deep grief from the death of his older brother, but didn't talk much about it with his children. "I know that in retrospect it was probably too painful for him. He was grieving, and I feel like by being here today, I honor his quiet grieving for his entire life,"he said somberly. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Operation Benjamin works to replace erroneous grave markers for Jewish American service members who died in battle

Operation Benjamin works to replace erroneous grave markers for Jewish American service members who died in battle Ben Zion Bernstein served...
Crypto investor accused of sadistically torturing biz partner in NYC luxury townhouseNew Foto - Crypto investor accused of sadistically torturing biz partner in NYC luxury townhouse

A cryptocurrency investor has been charged after he allegedly kidnapped an Italian former business partner and tortured him for two weeks -- using a taser, chainsaw and other twisted methods -- inside a plushNew York Citytownhouse as part of a sadistic plot to steal passwords, according to police and reports. John Woeltz, 37, was seen cuffed wearing a robe and barefooted outside his pad in the SoHo neighborhood of Manhattan on Friday morning, shortly after his victim made a daring escape and called the police for help. Woeltz, who is understood to have had prior business dealings with the 28-year-old unidentified victim, helped lure the man to the Princes Street townhouse on May 6, snatched his passport and tied him up before torturing him in an extortion plot to get the sought-after passwords, theNew York Postreports citing police sources. A 24-year-old female has also been arrested, police told Fox News. Nyc Executive Used Apartment To Rape, Torture Women In 'Calculated Campaign Of Violence': Prosecutors The victim endured severe abuse, including being bound with electrical cords, tasered while his feet were submerged in water, pistol-whipped, forced toingest cocaineand threatened with dismemberment using an electric chainsaw, the outlet reported. Polaroid photos showing the tourist being tied up with electrical wire and tortured, including one of him bound to a chair with a gun pointed at his head, were discovered by police, according to the sources, along with weapons and other incriminating evidence. Read On The Fox News App The victim managed to escape and call a nearby traffic cop. Officers responded to the address around 10 a.m. and witnesses described a dramatic scene as police, SWAT teams and emergency vehicles swarmed the area,Fox 5reported. Blue City Prosecutor Attacked In Own Home By Illegal Immigrant With Tren De Aragua Gang Ties: Police Woeltz, who the Post reports is from Kentucky, has been charged with two counts of second-degree assault, one count of kidnapping and one count of unlawful imprisonment,police toldFox News. Woeltz, a crypto entrepreneuran investor, was perp walked out of the 5th Precinct station last night wearing a white T-shirt and said nothing to screaming reporters. The victim was transported to Bellevue Hospital in stable condition. The 24-year-old woman, Beatrice Folchi of Manhattan, hasbeen chargedwith kidnapping and unlawful imprisonment. "He looked like a decent guy," one resident told Fox 5 describing Woeltz. "He just looked like a rich guy in a nice bathrobe, clean-shaven, hair was done. It didn't look like police had a problem arresting him. Original article source:Crypto investor accused of sadistically torturing biz partner in NYC luxury townhouse

Crypto investor accused of sadistically torturing biz partner in NYC luxury townhouse

Crypto investor accused of sadistically torturing biz partner in NYC luxury townhouse A cryptocurrency investor has been charged after he al...
McCaul touts money in Trump tax bill to pay Texas back for fighting Biden border policiesNew Foto - McCaul touts money in Trump tax bill to pay Texas back for fighting Biden border policies

There's a provision tucked into PresidentDonald Trump'sbroadly ranging "big, beautiful bill" that could see Texas get billions of dollars in funds that it spent on the state's border security under the Biden administration. The legislation earmarked $12 billion for a grant program allowing states to be reimbursed for costs they incurred trying to stem the flow of illegal immigration during the Democratic administration. The measure was added to the bill hours before the final vote – but Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas, the former chairman of the House Homeland Security and Foreign Affairs Committees, told Fox News Digital it was a product of months of negotiation. "Early on, [Homeland Security Committee Chair Mark Green, R-Tenn., and I were discussing reconciliation going through the Homeland Security Committee. And, you know, there was about $70 billion for the border," McCaul said. "Texas bore the brunt of the federal mission the last four years and deserves to be reimbursed. And so he agreed, had a conversation with Governor Abbott, and he agreed." House Gop Targets Another Dem Official Accused Of Blocking Ice Amid Delaney Hall Fallout While the text does not name Texas specifically, Fox News Digital was told that the measure's inclusion was primarily sought by the Lone Star state's congressional delegation. Read On The Fox News App The state of Texas, Fox News Digital was told, had incurred just over $11 billion in costs from Gov. Greg Abbott's efforts to keep the border in his state secure. "The fact of the matter is, when you look at the costs that were borne, Texas had the lion's share of [the burden] carrying out the federal mission when the Biden administration completely failed to deliver on border security," McCaul said. "My state built the border wall and built detention facilities. We bore a lot of costs." Operation Lone Star alone cost Texas $11.1 billion, according toThe Texas Tribune. Rather than add it to the initial text of the bill, McCaul said, leaders opted to include it in a "managers amendment" that was added on Wednesday night along with several other issues that lawmakers needed more time to negotiate. "The legislative process, it's something I've gotten to know over my 20 years and how to get things done up here. And I thought, you know, the way we worked it was strategically very smart," McCaul said. "It's going to the Senate now. And Senator Cornyn is going to take it up, be the champion in the Senate." The Texas Republican first met with Abbott and Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., on the matter in early February, Fox News Digital was told. McCaul said he also worked closely on the push with Republican Study Committee Chairman August Pfluger, R-Texas, who told Fox News Digital that "no state" carried more financial burden from the border crisis than Texas. "Texas spent $11.1 billion on border security, including $5.87 billion on personnel costs and $4.75 billion on border wall and barriers. When the federal government failed to secure our border and protect our communities, Texans stepped up," Pfluger said. Johnson, for his part, thanked McCaul for his efforts in a public written statement. "Thanks to Rep. McCaul, states that stepped up to protect Americans in the face of Biden'sborder catastrophewill be reimbursed for doing the work the Biden Administration refused to do," the speaker said. "Had those patriotic governors not taken action and used the resources of their state, the devastation from Biden's wide-open border would have been significantly worse." Meet The Trump-picked Lawmakers Giving Speaker Johnson A Full House Gop Conference Green said of the need for the measure, "In the absence of help from the Biden-Harris administration, states were forced to take extraordinary measures to mitigate the crisis and protect their communities by building barrier systems and increasing law enforcement activity." And while McCaul and his colleagues' efforts in the House do not guarantee that Texas will ultimately see those funds, it puts them one step closer to success. The measure is one aspect in a multi-trillion-dollar bill that Republicans are working to pass via the budget reconciliation process. By lowering the Senate's threshold for passage from 60 votes to 51, reconciliation enables the party in power to pass certain fiscal legislation while completely sidelining the minority – in this case, Democrats. Trump directed Republicans to use reconciliation to advance his policies on taxes, immigration, energy, defense, and the national debt. The Senate and House must pass identical versions of the bill before it gets to Trump's desk. McCaul told Fox News Digital that he was confident the measure would stay in the Senate bill after conversations with the Trump administration on the matter. "I anticipate it will go forward," McCaul said. "I'm, just proud that we were able to get this done. I'm very proud of what my state did to stop the flow of illegals and dangerous actors coming into the country." When reached for comment, Abbott told Fox News Digital, "This is a national issue that Texas was proud to address, and we are grateful for the allocation that reduces the financial burden that Texas incurred." Original article source:McCaul touts money in Trump tax bill to pay Texas back for fighting Biden border policies

McCaul touts money in Trump tax bill to pay Texas back for fighting Biden border policies

McCaul touts money in Trump tax bill to pay Texas back for fighting Biden border policies There's a provision tucked into PresidentDonal...

 

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